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    • Idby:0014358F907011B7
    • Broad period:BRONZE AGE
    • Object type:BATTLEAXE
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  • Thumbnail image of IOW-DEFCA1

Record ID: IOW-DEFCA1
Object type: BATTLEAXE
Broad period: BRONZE AGE
County: Isle of Wight
Workflow stage: Published Find published
Small and complete polished stone battleaxe of the Early Bronze Age. Length 116mm, width 36.5mm and 38mm thick. Weight 251.94g. Viewed from either face, the sides are convex in profile, one side being slightly more convex than the other side. The circular perforation is "hour-glass" shaped in cross-section, its maximum diameter is 28mm and its minimum diameter is 14.5mm. Viewing each edge, the profile of the sides taper gently from the rounded butt to the small rounded point. The butt has been damaged in use. The stone type, containing phenocrysts of pyroxene and feldspar is …
Created on: Thursday 26th February 2004
Last updated: Tuesday 13th December 2022
Spatial data recorded. This findspot is known as 'Isle of Wight', grid reference and parish protected.


  • Thumbnail image of CORN-BA3487

Record ID: CORN-BA3487
Object type: BATTLEAXE
Broad period: BRONZE AGE
County: Leeds
Workflow stage: Published Find published
Stone battleaxe, greenstone (dolerite) perforated waisted battle axe, lozenge-shaped in plan, sub-rectangular in profile and oval in section, with faceted butt end, expanded blade and incised linear grooves emphasising the concave profile of the upper and lower faces of the axe. "Incised grooves, that is grooves about 1 mm wide and deep with sharply defined edges, are made by cutting the artefact surface repeatedly with sharp flakes of a hard material such as quartzite. This technique is quite different from those employed to shape and finish battle-axes, namely pecking and grinding" …
Created on: Saturday 11th September 2010
Last updated: Friday 11th July 2014
Spatial data recorded.


  • Thumbnail image of CORN-70CDC7

Record ID: CORN-70CDC7
Object type: BATTLEAXE
Broad period: BRONZE AGE
County: North Yorkshire
Workflow stage: Published Find published
Stone (diorite) perforated waisted battle axe, lozenge-shaped in plan, sub-rectangular in profile and oval in section, with a faceted butt end and an expanded blade. The surface has been polished but is pitted slightly on one side and there is iron staining on the other side. The shafthole is circular in plan and hourglass-shaped in profile and is 22 mm in diameter and 32 mm in height. The axe is made of a weathered altered dolerite and the polishing and linear striations within the shafthole are distinctive and suggest that the axe was not permanently mounted on to a shaft, but conti…
Created on: Monday 16th September 2013
Last updated: Tuesday 25th February 2014
Spatial data recorded.


  • Thumbnail image of SWYOR-B5D034

Record ID: SWYOR-B5D034
Object type: BATTLEAXE
Broad period: BRONZE AGE
County: Nottinghamshire
Workflow stage: Awaiting validation Find awaiting validation
A Late Neolithic to Early Bronze Age stone battleaxe (larger examples are also known as axe hammers) dating from about 3300 BC - 1000 BC.The body is broadly egg-shaped, tapering to a blunt point at one end, and a narrow rounded butt at the other. The sides are convex. The two main faces are very slightly dished but are much flatter than some published examples, which can be markedly concave. There is a large circular perforation of 28mm diameter through the tool. The perforation is convex rather that hour-glass shaped, and only slightly so. The blade of the axe-hammer is on the same a…
Created on: Monday 23rd May 2022
Last updated: Sunday 12th June 2022
Spatial data recorded. This findspot is known as 'Styrrup with Oldcotes', grid reference and parish protected.


  • Thumbnail image of LIN-91E3A6

Record ID: LIN-91E3A6
Object type: BATTLEAXE
Broad period: BRONZE AGE
County: Lincolnshire
Workflow stage: Awaiting validation Find awaiting validation
An incomplete stone perforated battleaxe of probable very late Neolithic or early Bronze Age date (2500-1800 BC). Probably belonging to Roe Group 1, early form. Only about 50% of the axe has survived but it is finely. It is broadly sub-triangular / wedge shaped with gentle concave sides, expanding towards the cutting edge with a flared crescentic edge. The cutting edge has a small, probably more recent, chip. In profile the axe is broadly sub-rectangular. The perforation is now semi-circular due to an old break, with the patina matching the body of the axe. The but…
Created on: Thursday 21st July 2022
Last updated: Tuesday 9th August 2022
Spatial data recorded.


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